What did the IPCC say about aerosols?

Aerosols dominate the uncertainty in the total anthropogenic radiative forcing. A complete understanding of past and future climate change requires a thorough assessment of aerosol-cloud-radiation interactions.

The IPCC are concerned with assessing how various factors affect the Earth’s climate and it dedicates an entire chapter to aerosols and clouds, which is accessible here.

How do aerosols impact our climate?

Aerosols, can broadly influence the climate in two ways; aerosol-radiation interactions and aerosol-cloud interactions. The IPCC included some nice diagrams of how these processes occur, which I’ve included below.

Illustration of aerosol-radiation interactions produced by the IPCC. This figure and more are available here.

Both of these interactions are well established but the problem is pinning down the magnitude of these effects at larger scales and over time.

Headline numbers

The IPCC often refer to a term known as radiative forcing when assessing climate impacts. This illustrates the change in the amount of incoming versus outgoing radiation to our atmosphere. This regulates global temperatures and can affect things like circulation patterns and precipitation. Positive radiative forcing values increase temperature, while negative values reduce them. This value is usually referenced back to before the Industrial Revolution (typically 1750), when human influences on the composition of the atmosphere were more limited.

To put this in some context, the radiative forcing for carbon dioxide is 1.82 W/m2, with a reported range from 1.63 to 2.01 W/m2. What this means is that since 1750, adding carbon dioxide to our air has altered the radiation balance of the atmosphere and that this will cause a warming in the absence of any cooling factors.

In the table below, I’ve collated the various estimates for the aerosol influence from the report. As well as the central estimate, it is important to examine the range as this is one of the crucial aspects that drives the statements about our uncertain understanding of aerosols. The central estimates and the forcing range all suggest that aerosols exert a cooling influence on our climate; aerosols offset some of the warming influence from carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. If we first focus on the IPCC 2007 and 2013 values, we see that the central estimate has for the latest report (AR5) indicates that aerosols are exerting less of a cooling effect than estimated previously. The range of the forcing estimate has also reduced.

The IPCC is effectively saying that the cooling influence from aerosols is slightly weaker than previously estimated and that our understanding has improved.

Aerosol radiative forcing estimates.

The other values refer to different ways of calculating the impact and it is these numbers that inform the overall value in the report. The satellite based value refers to studies where satellite measurements of aerosol properties are used in conjunction with climate models; they are not wholly measurement based. In terms of studies using climate models on their own, the IPCC used a subset of climate models for their radiative forcing assessment, choosing those that had a “more complete and consistent treatment of aerosol-cloud interactions”.

The satellite based central value of -0.85 W/m2 is less negative than the central value from the climate models, which means the models indicate more cooling than the satellite based estimate. Compared to the subset of climate models that the IPCC used for their radiative forcing judgement, there is little overlap between their ranges also.

Why so uncertain?

This lack of agreement is a big driver for the large uncertainty range. It’s important to stress that there isn’t a strong reason to “trust” one set of results over another here as both satellite observations of aerosol properties and their representation in climate models are prone to many biases and it isn’t currently clear how these will impact the results.

Both methods are very sensitive to the assumed pre-industrial conditions assumed by the studies. Both methods have difficulties dealing with clouds but for different reasons.

Satellites can’t typically see through clouds, so they can miss aerosol trapped below them. Another major challenge is when layers of aerosol exist above clouds, which can affect the satellite measurements. Satellites are best suited to measuring the total amount of aerosol in the atmosphere. They have difficulty identifying different aerosol types, which means they can lump together natural and anthropogenic aerosols. They also have difficulty determining the relative importance of scattering or absorbing aerosols, which will determine the climate impact. Typically they can’t determine where the aerosol is in the vertical dimension of the atmosphere, which again will influence the climate impact. There are certainly advances in these areas but as ever, more work is required.

Models on the other hand, have difficulty representing aerosol-cloud interactions due to cloud systems typically being smaller than the resolution of a climate model, the complex number of processes at play and the lack of real-world measurements to test them. There is some evidence to suggest that climate models at the global scale tend to overestimate the size of the aerosol effect on cloud properties.

If we examine more details from the climate models, we see that there are large differences between models in terms of what types of aerosol it considers to be important. For example some models say that dust is a major contributor to the global aerosol burden, while others disagree. These are important details as climate models can sometimes broadly agree in terms of the radiative forcing estimate they provide but for very different reasons. Black carbon is another species that can contribute to varying degrees in different models, which is important as it warms the atmosphere; how a model represents black carbon is going to have a strong influence on the reported cooling. Nitrate is a potentially important species that often isn’t even included in climate models.

To summarise: it’s complicated.

What does this mean for climate change?

The short answer is: probably not a lot.

The change from the previous report is overall quite small (0.3 W/m2) and this is predominantly a result of improvements in our ability to represent aerosol processes (particularly clouds) since the last report. To put the change in context, between 2005 and 2011, the radiative forcing by greenhouse gases increased by 0.2 W/m2 due to increased concentrations in our atmosphere alone. At present, the uncertainties in aerosol radiative forcing mean that making definitive statements are likely unwise and putting faith in any one particular result will be fraught with difficulties. Focussing on the global scale also ignores the much larger regional impacts that aerosols can have, which is of more relevance to the wider issue.

The current state of understanding of aerosols suggests that they’ve exerted a cooling influence on our climate, which has offset some of the warming expected from the increase in greenhouse gases in our atmosphere. Improving this understanding will be crucial for assessing both past and future climate change.

Will Morgan is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Centre for Atmospheric Science at the University of Manchester, UK. His research focusses on measurements of the chemical composition of aerosols and how this impacts air quality and climate. He is usually found at a computer in an office or on a research aircraft travelling a few hundred metres above the ground. Will also contributes to a podcast about atmospheric science called The Barometer. Tweets as @willmorgan.

8 Comments

Thanks, a nice post. I learned quite a bit from this. I have a question. Various people have been claiming that climate models have too large an aerosol forcing and are therefore over-estimating climate sensitivity. The numbers that they quote are similar to the number that you quote here for the model estimates of aerosol forcing.

From what I understand from your posts, the climate models you’re referring to here are climate models that are being used to estimate the aerosol forcing. You’re not referring, necessarily, to the values used for aerosol forcing in all climate models. Have I understand that properly?

The next part of my question is, if this is the case, what implication does that have for the value of aerosol forcing used in the climate models that are estimating climate sensitivity. Does it mean that the value being used is typically higher than the AR5 best estimate would suggest, or are climate models overall using a broad range of values and hence covering the range quite well?

Will Morgan
February 11, 2014, 3:47 pm

Thanks for the comment and questions.

There are a few elements here so I’ll try and work through them.

Firstly, the subset of climate models that informed the IPCC expert judgement are ones that they judged to have more realistic representations of aerosol-cloud interactions. You can see the list in Table 7.4 of chapter 7. I’ve not read the whole chapter that deals with climate sensitivity but I think the range comes from the CMIP5 spread i.e. different models are being used here. It would be interesting to know the spread in climate sensitivity just from the ones used for the aerosol expert judgement I think.

The idea that the climate models have too large an aerosol forcing (too much cooling) isn’t as clear cut as has been stated. You could argue that climate models underestimate or exclude some important cooling species, which would strengthen the cooling by the models. As I discussed above, the satellite measurements have issues of their own to contend with and it isn’t clear which way the various biases will go. It isn’t clear which is the “truth” here. I know there are other estimates of the aerosol forcing, which are more in line with the satellite based studies (discussed in chapter 10.8.3), which use various combinations of measurements and models e.g. Murphy et al. (2009), Libardoni & Forest (2011) and Lewis (2013). These use different time periods to the other estimates though, which complicates comparisons. They also include various assumptions, which might not be appropriate.

As far as aerosol forcing in climate models, this will vary in each model depending on the assumptions that they use about aerosols. In GCMs, the properties and processes are parameterised and different models implement things in different ways, which tends to lead to a broad diversity in the results. There isn’t a single representation of aerosols in the models.

On your last question, I wouldn’t want to make such broad statements without looking at the models in more detail. The change in the central estimate between AR4 and AR5 is pretty small, especially given the still large uncertainty ranges. The aerosol radiative forcing isn’t the only thing that drives the climate sensitivity given by models also, although it certainly plays a role.

At present it is difficult to make precise statements about aerosols given the large uncertainties. That is where we are at the moment.

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About

Polluting the Internet is written by Will Morgan, a research scientist from the University of Manchester, UK. The blog focusses on tiny particles suspended in our atmosphere, called aerosols, which can build up and pollute our skies. This air pollution is harmful for our health and can also influence the Earth’s climate. Will writes about current research in aerosol science, as well as his fieldwork exploits in pursuit of these tiny particles.